They've created a 12-foot-tall tree constructed with transparent hoover tubes at the base. And as air is sent up through the tubes, nine hovering purple ornaments dance in the air. A Yellow foam ball atop the tree represents its star.

The tree was installed in the company's reception area earlier this December.

The engineers, on a mission to create a tree they've never seen before and execute on it during the timeframe of one month, enlisted the help of a fluid dynamics theory called "Bernoulii's principle."

As explained in a statement that was noted in Tech Times: "The tree uses Bernoulli's principle to suspend baubles at the end of the tree branches. Swiss scientist Daniel Bernoulli demonstrated that, in most cases, the pressure in a liquid or gas decreases as it moves faster, this is why the baubles stays (sic) suspended in the air."

You can take a closer look at the high-tech tree below:

One Dyson engineer told Tech Times that they had to call in a few "favors," including "fluid dynamics, acoustics and model making," but we'd say the special effects certainly made a lasting impression.

People walk in a street covered with snow as they attend Christmas celebrations in the town of Richev, Belarus.
Orthodox Christians celebrate Christmas on Jan. 7 in the Middle East, Russia and other Orthodox churches that use the old Julian calendar instead of the 17th-century Gregorian calendar adopted by Catholics, Protestants, Greek Orthodox and commonly used in secular life around the world.